The Weather Outlook

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Quantum
28 January 2019 11:04:56

 

 

Q - where is that warm core originating from?  From the air drying?  IF its sourced from colder climates, how can it create a warmer (albeit still frigid) core?

Originally Posted by: Russwirral 

Look at the 500hpa temperature profile, the anomolies are ridiculously low. Tropical cyclones form under regions of low wind shear and high vertical temperature gradient. Usually that's the tropics but cooling the top of the atmosphere is just as effective as warming the surface of the atmosphere and that's what we have going on here. The SSTs over the north at altlantic are relatively warm at 10C or so but there is frigid air moving over the top. This creates convective instability, which is exasserbated by latent heat release as showers form and consensation occurs.

Usually, of course, you just get showers because the wind shear is too high but apparantely its going to be low enough to actually spin up some kind of tropical like cyclone.

It does happen semi regularly on the ice front near svalbard where you can get frigid arictic air moving over relatively warm seas. But polar lows occasionally get as far south as scotland.

 


25/26 (850hpa temp) 11 days snow/sleet falling

18/11 (-4) 19/11 (-6) 20/11 (-6) 01/01 (-7) 04/01 (-10) 10/01 (-7) 11/01 (-3) 30/01 (-1) 13/02 (-6) 15/02 (-4) 18/02 (-6)

24/25 10d

18/11 (-6) 19/11 (-6) 23/11 (-2) 22/12 (-5) 04/01 (-5) 05/01 (0)14/02 (0) 15/02 (0)12/03 (-6) 13/03 (-6)

23/24 8d

29/11 (-6) 30/11 (-6) 02/12 (-5) 03/12 (-5) 04/12 (-3) 16/01 (-3) 18/01 (-8)08/02 (-5)

22/23 7d

18/12 (-1)06/03 (-6) 08/03 (-8) 09/03 (-6) 10/03 (-8) 11/03 (-5) 14/03 (-6)

21/22 12d

Quantum
28 January 2019 11:07:08

You can think of a polar low as an extreme varient of the lake effect. Where, instead of shallow convection under high shear you have deep convection under no shear.

 


25/26 (850hpa temp) 11 days snow/sleet falling

18/11 (-4) 19/11 (-6) 20/11 (-6) 01/01 (-7) 04/01 (-10) 10/01 (-7) 11/01 (-3) 30/01 (-1) 13/02 (-6) 15/02 (-4) 18/02 (-6)

24/25 10d

18/11 (-6) 19/11 (-6) 23/11 (-2) 22/12 (-5) 04/01 (-5) 05/01 (0)14/02 (0) 15/02 (0)12/03 (-6) 13/03 (-6)

23/24 8d

29/11 (-6) 30/11 (-6) 02/12 (-5) 03/12 (-5) 04/12 (-3) 16/01 (-3) 18/01 (-8)08/02 (-5)

22/23 7d

18/12 (-1)06/03 (-6) 08/03 (-8) 09/03 (-6) 10/03 (-8) 11/03 (-5) 14/03 (-6)

21/22 12d

tallyho_83
28 January 2019 11:09:30

 

Yes, it's the second successive GFS operational run to produce something broadly similar in FI, so perhaps it's picked up on something. It would be consistent with the Met Office extended outlook. One lives in hope. :) 

Originally Posted by: jhall 

Yes! We wait with anticipation! But it has been like this now for two consecutive runs albeit different timings post +252. I don't suppose there will be an upgrade in the ECM tonight as it only goes up until 240. At least this is a start! BUT will this trend continue?

 


Home Location - Vixen Tor Close, Okehampton, Devon (221m ASL)


Sean Moon

Magical Moon

www.magical-moon.com

Arcus
28 January 2019 11:12:32

Polar lows do occasionally hit scotland, they are usually pretty good snow and soft hail makers but since they are fuelled by tropical processes they die really quickly when they go inland, so don't expect anything out of it if you are away from N or W coasts.

 

And yes I am of the opinion that polar lows are more similar to TCs than depressions. Unlike (most) TCs they develop out of baroclinic disturbances but like TCs there intensification and maintance is determined by surface fluxes rather than horizontal temperature gradients. Although since they are extremely shallow and underneath cold core lows it may be more accurate to describe them as being like subtropical cyclones.

Although that thing yesterday was not a subtropical cyclone, it was a catogary 2 hurricane.

 

Originally Posted by: Quantum 

That's not correct Q - some can be quite long-lasting, even over land. I recall one from 2006 (I think) that tracked down on a northerly through Scotland and into N. England, and delivered several cm in a very short space of time.


Ben,

Nr. Easingwold, North Yorkshire

30m asl

Quantum
28 January 2019 11:15:56

 

That's not correct Q - some can be quite long-lasting, even over land. I recall one from 2006 (I think) that tracked down on a northerly through Scotland and into N. England, and delivered several cm in a very short space of time.

Originally Posted by: Arcus 

It may well have undergone something equivalent to an extratropical transition and become a cold front or something like that. But the tropical structure of the PL is very quickly degraded as soon as it hits land.

 


25/26 (850hpa temp) 11 days snow/sleet falling

18/11 (-4) 19/11 (-6) 20/11 (-6) 01/01 (-7) 04/01 (-10) 10/01 (-7) 11/01 (-3) 30/01 (-1) 13/02 (-6) 15/02 (-4) 18/02 (-6)

24/25 10d

18/11 (-6) 19/11 (-6) 23/11 (-2) 22/12 (-5) 04/01 (-5) 05/01 (0)14/02 (0) 15/02 (0)12/03 (-6) 13/03 (-6)

23/24 8d

29/11 (-6) 30/11 (-6) 02/12 (-5) 03/12 (-5) 04/12 (-3) 16/01 (-3) 18/01 (-8)08/02 (-5)

22/23 7d

18/12 (-1)06/03 (-6) 08/03 (-8) 09/03 (-6) 10/03 (-8) 11/03 (-5) 14/03 (-6)

21/22 12d

Maunder Minimum
28 January 2019 11:16:43

 

Yes! We wait with anticipation! But it has been like this now for two consecutive runs albeit different timings post +252. I don't suppose there will be an upgrade in the ECM tonight as it only goes up until 240. At least this is a start! BUT will this trend continue?

 

Originally Posted by: tallyho_83 

No need to worry about the ECM Op at day 10 - it has been completely consistent over the past few weeks - consistently wrong that is.

I have lost all faith in that particular model - prefer ICON and UKMO and then as we get close to an event (such as this week) - switch to the fax charts (although even they can change quite dramatically at t+96 as Matt demonstrated above).


New world order coming.
Arcus
28 January 2019 11:19:51

 

It may well have undergone something equivalent to an extratropical transition and become a cold front or something like that. But the tropical structure of the PL is very quickly degraded as soon as it hits land.

 

Originally Posted by: Quantum 

Nope, it retained classical characteristics all the way. I remember discussing it with Paul Hudson at a book signing he did in York...


Ben,

Nr. Easingwold, North Yorkshire

30m asl

Quantum
28 January 2019 11:21:54

 

Nope, it retained classical characteristics all the way. I remember discussing it with Paul Hudson at a book signing he did in York...

Originally Posted by: Arcus 

Can you find out more details or get the date of the storm?

I'm very skeptical a PL can survive a while over land without transitioning.

 


25/26 (850hpa temp) 11 days snow/sleet falling

18/11 (-4) 19/11 (-6) 20/11 (-6) 01/01 (-7) 04/01 (-10) 10/01 (-7) 11/01 (-3) 30/01 (-1) 13/02 (-6) 15/02 (-4) 18/02 (-6)

24/25 10d

18/11 (-6) 19/11 (-6) 23/11 (-2) 22/12 (-5) 04/01 (-5) 05/01 (0)14/02 (0) 15/02 (0)12/03 (-6) 13/03 (-6)

23/24 8d

29/11 (-6) 30/11 (-6) 02/12 (-5) 03/12 (-5) 04/12 (-3) 16/01 (-3) 18/01 (-8)08/02 (-5)

22/23 7d

18/12 (-1)06/03 (-6) 08/03 (-8) 09/03 (-6) 10/03 (-8) 11/03 (-5) 14/03 (-6)

21/22 12d

Arcus
28 January 2019 11:23:25

 

Can you find out more details or get the date of the storm?

I'm very skeptical a PL can survive a while over land without transitioning.

 

Originally Posted by: Quantum 

I'll have a dig around on the archives.


Ben,

Nr. Easingwold, North Yorkshire

30m asl

RobN
  • RobN
  • Advanced Member
28 January 2019 11:24:47

 

Look at the 500hpa temperature profile, the anomolies are ridiculously low. Tropical cyclones form under regions of low wind shear and high vertical temperature gradient. Usually that's the tropics but cooling the top of the atmosphere is just as effective as warming the surface of the atmosphere and that's what we have going on here. The SSTs over the north at altlantic are relatively warm at 10C or so but there is frigid air moving over the top. This creates convective instability, which is exasserbated by latent heat release as showers form and consensation occurs.

Usually, of course, you just get showers because the wind shear is too high but apparantely its going to be low enough to actually spin up some kind of tropical like cyclone.

It does happen semi regularly on the ice front near svalbard where you can get frigid arictic air moving over relatively warm seas. But polar lows occasionally get as far south as scotland.

 

Originally Posted by: Quantum 

Thanks for the explanation 

Would it be possible to get a PL forming in a very cold easterly across a relatively warm North Sea?

 


Rob

In the flatlands of South Cambridgeshire 15m ASL.

Quantum
28 January 2019 11:35:15

 

Thanks for the explanation 

Would it be possible to get a PL forming in a very cold easterly across a relatively warm North Sea?

 

Originally Posted by: RobN 

I think the north sea environment is too dry for it to happen. I've near heard of it happening over the north sea.

 


25/26 (850hpa temp) 11 days snow/sleet falling

18/11 (-4) 19/11 (-6) 20/11 (-6) 01/01 (-7) 04/01 (-10) 10/01 (-7) 11/01 (-3) 30/01 (-1) 13/02 (-6) 15/02 (-4) 18/02 (-6)

24/25 10d

18/11 (-6) 19/11 (-6) 23/11 (-2) 22/12 (-5) 04/01 (-5) 05/01 (0)14/02 (0) 15/02 (0)12/03 (-6) 13/03 (-6)

23/24 8d

29/11 (-6) 30/11 (-6) 02/12 (-5) 03/12 (-5) 04/12 (-3) 16/01 (-3) 18/01 (-8)08/02 (-5)

22/23 7d

18/12 (-1)06/03 (-6) 08/03 (-8) 09/03 (-6) 10/03 (-8) 11/03 (-5) 14/03 (-6)

21/22 12d

JACKO4EVER
28 January 2019 11:36:08
Morning all, very interesting read Q et al, thanks indeed. Still a good deal of uncertainty this week (looking cool to cold) never mind further beyond.
Downpour
28 January 2019 11:43:57

 

No need to worry about the ECM Op at day 10 - it has been completely consistent over the past few weeks - consistently wrong that is.

I have lost all faith in that particular model - prefer ICON and UKMO and then as we get close to an event (such as this week) - switch to the fax charts (although even they can change quite dramatically at t+96 as Matt demonstrated above).

Originally Posted by: Maunder Minimum 

 

Very true, Maunder. 

 

The ECM has been a poor performer of late, it has to be said. 


Chingford

London E4

147ft

Rob K
28 January 2019 11:44:25
Possibly some hints of a reversal of the trend to mildness in the GEFS long term, although still lots of scatter.
Yateley, NE Hampshire, 73m asl

"But who wants to be foretold the weather? It is bad enough when it comes, without our having the misery of knowing about it beforehand." — Jerome K. Jerome

Russwirral
28 January 2019 11:46:07

Possibly some hints of a reversal of the trend to mildness in the GEFS long term, although still lots of scatter.

Originally Posted by: Rob K 

 

Milder runs in GEFS can also be a pre-cursor signal to blocking.  Its not always a bad thing to see in the suite.


Arbroath 1320
28 January 2019 11:53:58

 

 

Milder runs in GEFS can also be a pre-cursor signal to blocking.  Its not always a bad thing to see in the suite.

Originally Posted by: Russwirral 

Yes, I was just about to post the same.

The 6z GEFS' 850s on the face of it don't look that inspiring. However, when you look at the individual runs, the majority favour some kind of blocking to the East/NE in FI, albeit the pressure rise in most is not sustained as it comes under pressure from the jet to the North. Some runs are decent throughout though, with perturbation 16 being the closest to the Holy Grail.

That far out however, it's the trend towards a pressure rise to the East/NE which is important. Could be gone in the 12z GEFS of course, but I have always felt that the GFS model has been good over the years at picking up pattern changes, albeit it is clearly prone to volatility run to run, and particularly so this Winter.

Edit - The GFSP 6z follows the same trend as GEFS with a pressure rise to the NE in FI, only for it to collapse later on in the run.


Kenmore, Highland Perthshire, GGTTH
Brian Gaze
28 January 2019 12:09:11

GEFS 06z have trended colder in the longer term again.


Brian Gaze

Berkhamsted

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"I'm not socialist, I know that. I don't believe in sharing my money." - Gary Numan

kmoorman
28 January 2019 12:18:07

GEFS 06z have trended colder in the longer term again.

Originally Posted by: Brian Gaze 

 

Snow Rows for Brighton not looking particularly inspiring 

 

 

 


Home: Durrington, Worthing, West Sussex. (16 ASL)

Work: Canary Wharf, London

Follow me on Twitter @kmoorman1968

Brian Gaze
28 January 2019 12:31:04

 

 

Snow Rows for Brighton not looking particularly inspiring 

 

 

 

Originally Posted by: kmoorman 

 

Indeed. Not sure if you've seen, but the snow row league and historic graphs are now here:

 

https://www.theweatheroutlook.com/twodata/snowrow.aspx?location=Brighton#Brighton

 


Brian Gaze

Berkhamsted

TWO Buzz - get the latest news and views 

"I'm not socialist, I know that. I don't believe in sharing my money." - Gary Numan

White Meadows
28 January 2019 12:33:43
2m temps never below zero from February. Tbh still can’t see where met office are scrawling their text from.

http://old.wetterzentrale.de/pics/MT2_London_ens.png 

Chunky Pea
28 January 2019 12:38:20

Polar lows do occasionally hit scotland, they are usually pretty good snow and soft hail makers but since they are fuelled by tropical processes they die really quickly when they go inland, so don't expect anything out of it if you are away from N or W coasts.

 

And yes I am of the opinion that polar lows are more similar to TCs than depressions. Unlike (most) TCs they develop out of baroclinic disturbances but like TCs there intensification and maintance is determined by surface fluxes rather than horizontal temperature gradients. Although since they are extremely shallow and underneath cold core lows it may be more accurate to describe them as being like subtropical cyclones.

Although that thing yesterday was not a subtropical cyclone, it was a catogary 2 hurricane.

Originally Posted by: Quantum 

This is interesting. 

A Polar Low hit the NW of Ireland about 3 or 4 years ago around this time of year(unsure of date) with lightning and gusty winds being the bigger feature. Can't remember if it brought snow. 


Patrick,

East Galway, Ireland.

Brian Gaze
28 January 2019 12:57:25

2m temps never below zero from February. Tbh still can’t see where met office are scrawling their text from.

http://old.wetterzentrale.de/pics/MT2_London_ens.png

Originally Posted by: White Meadows 

That's not correct. I'm also doubtful about the extent of the cold signal but to say 2m temps don't go below 0C is wrong.


Brian Gaze

Berkhamsted

TWO Buzz - get the latest news and views 

"I'm not socialist, I know that. I don't believe in sharing my money." - Gary Numan

kmoorman
28 January 2019 13:02:25

 

 

Indeed. Not sure if you've seen, but the snow row league and historic graphs are now here:

 

https://www.theweatheroutlook.com/twodata/snowrow.aspx?location=Brighton#Brighton

 

Originally Posted by: Brian Gaze 

 

Thanks Brian - I was trying to find that page from the Charts page, but there doesn't appear to be a link. 

I don't suppose you store old ensemble plots by location do you?

 

 


Home: Durrington, Worthing, West Sussex. (16 ASL)

Work: Canary Wharf, London

Follow me on Twitter @kmoorman1968

Gandalf The White
28 January 2019 13:13:59

2m temps never below zero from February. Tbh still can’t see where met office are scrawling their text from.

http://old.wetterzentrale.de/pics/MT2_London_ens.png

Originally Posted by: White Meadows 

Well, either it is:

A.  Obviously they use GFS exclusively and therefore someone in Exeter is going to get the sack for gross incompetence.

or

B. They have their own forecast models and they are telling a different story.

 

 

I think B is just slightly more likely, don't you?

 

 


Location: South Cambridgeshire

130 metres ASL

52.0N 0.1E



White Meadows
28 January 2019 13:21:12

 

Well, either it is:

A.  Obviously they use GFS exclusively and therefore someone in Exeter is going to get the sack for gross incompetence.

or

B. They have their own forecast models and they are telling a different story.

 

 

I think B is just slightly more likely, don't you?

 

 

Originally Posted by: Gandalf The White 

or C). No body knows for certain but a hefty moderation to the long term forecast is due soon.

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